Deep-Fried Rattlesnake Steaks

An Uncommon Dish

My father was a veteran of the Pacific Campaign with the U.S. Army in World War II. When we were young he use to tell us stories about his adventures while in the Army.

After getting drafted he was first sent from his home in Rochester, New York to Ft. Niagara in the far western part of the state.

This was the new Ft. Niagara which had been built by the Army next to, but outside the walls, of Old Ft. Niagara which had originally been built by the French in colonial times and had been used and fought over by the French, British and Americans.

Following his basic training at Ft. Niagara, he spent time at Fort Dix and Camp Wood in New Jersey before being sent to Ft. Sam Houston in San Antonio, Texas. From San Antonio, it was off to Australia and then to combat in New Guinea and the Philippines following which he went to Japan with the first wave of occupation troops and then home.

Growing up we heard tales of his experiences in all of these places. One thing I remember his telling about San Antonio was seeing rattlesnake steak on the menus in some of the restaurants.

I don't recall whether he mentioned whether or not he had tried it but it didn't sound very appealing to me and still doesn't.

However, a while ago the of eating rattlesnake came up in an email exchange with my old college roommate, Todd, who had spent a few years in Texas while in the Air Force and before I knew it I had an email from him which included the following recipe for Deep Fried Rattlesnake.

Since I haven't published any recipes recently, I decided it was time to share another one, but with the disclaimer that not only have I not tried this recipe, I have no desire to try it or to sample the results if someone else tries it.

Also, while my friend sent it to me, I am not sure of its original source but am assuming that it is like other recipes which get passed around and tweeked and the original creator forgotten. If the real author ever sees this please accept my apologies but that is the risk one takes when they share a recipe - they get copied, re-copied, passed around and are claimed by numerous people.

Comments

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Mikayla 7 years ago

Thanks for sharing! My cousin and I are cooking one up and found this very helpful...

Author

Chuck Nugent 9 years agofrom Tucson, Arizona

Thanks for the comment Jimmy. As for me, I'll pass on both haggis and rattlesnake. Lol.

James Paterson 9 years agofrom Scotland

Thanks for sharing this Chuck, lol, i would try it after all i have eaten haggis.....jimmy

Merle Ann Johnson 9 years agofrom NW in the land of the Free

Aww we had one once...it was like chicken...was hilarious tho. Not having a recipe we skinned it and put it on the bbq with our steak.put the top on...when we came to check it..the snake was in a coiled up position...Snake and steak.....LOL G-Ma :o) hugs

Elaine Hannah 9 years agofrom Tejas, USA

Thanks for sharing, Chuck, but I have only one comment:

Eating a rattlersnake? This. Is. All. Bad.

*shivers*

Health Conscious 9 years agofrom South Florida - USA

I'd rather try rattlesnake than iguana, I saw that there was a Florida father and son catching and selling them for meat.

Author

Chuck Nugent 9 years agofrom Tucson, Arizona

sixtyorso - thanks for the comment. I agree, snake is not my idea of good dining either. However, since I had the recipe I thought I would make it available in case anyone wants to try it. Thanks again for the comment.

Clive Fagan 9 years agofrom South Africa

Thanks for sharing this but rattlesnake or any other snake is not quite my thing!